Abstract

Audiometric investigations and electrophysiologic recordings of cochlear and brain-stem auditory evoked potentials (BAEPs) were performed in 13 patients to elucidate further the type of hearing disorders in Ramsay Hunt syndrome. Transtympanic electrocochleography showed no enhancement of summating potential and did not suggest secondary endolymphatic hydrops. The recording of BAEPs was clearly abnormal in several of the 13 patients. The striking feature of the abnormalities in these patients was the prolongation of the latencies of waves III and V with the preservation of wave I, which clearly suggests retrocochlear involvement. In all the patients tested, abnormalities of the BAEPs were present only on the affected side. It is possible, on the basis of BAEP findings, to suggest that in Ramsay Hunt syndrome both cochlear and retrocochlear involvement may occur.

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